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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  We have isolated a homologue to the Drosophila caudal (cad) gene from the flour beetle Tribolium castaneum and have studied its expression pattern. The Tribolium caudal (Tc-cad) gene arrangement is unusual in that there is a partial duplication of the gene resulting in alternative transcripts with identical 5′-exons, but different 3′-exons encoding two different homeoboxes. Expression analysis was done by whole-mount in situ hybridization and by staining with an antibody raised against the N-terminal part of the protein that is common to both transcripts. At early stages we observe a homogeneously distributed maternal mRNA which is initially also translated throughout the embryo. A little later, a posterior to anterior CAD protein gradient is formed, very similar to that in Drosophila. However, because of the differences in the fate map between Drosophila and Tribolium, the CAD protein expression at blastoderm stage covers the prospective head and thoracic region and not the abdomen as in Drosophila. Expression of Tc-cad in the prospective abdomen is only seen during further germband growth where it becomes restricted to the growth zone in which the segments are formed. This expression is very similar to the growth zone expression in the somitogenic region seen for cad homologues in vertebrates. After the completion of the segmentation process Tc-cad expression becomes confined to a terminal stripe which resembles a similar stripe at late blastoderm stages in Drosophila.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1996-08-06
    Print ISSN: 0027-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1091-6490
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2012-04-28
    Description: The fauna of the volcanic island Malpelo located west of Colombia's Pacific coast includes only two species of land snails. One is a new endemic species of the subulinid genus Ischnocion , with which Rectobelus , Microbeliscus and Nannobeliscus are provisionally synonymized. Ischnocion conica new species differs from other species of the genus in the conical shell with radial palatal folds in juvenile stages. The other land snail species from Malpelo Island represents a new endemic thysanophorid genus. This genus, Malpelina (type species: Malpelina labiata new species), differs from other taxa of the Thysanophoridae in the yellowish-brown, depressed-globular shell with a distinctly thickened peristome, a broad glandular genital atrium, the lack of a vagina, a long penis, a long and exposed talon and the lack of entocones from all radular teeth. Malpelina is more closely related to Central American taxa than to thysanophorids from the Colombian mainland. Thus, it is more likely that Malpelo Island has been colonized by Malpelina from the north in accordance with palaeotectonic reconstructions. It is less clear whether Ischnocion reached Malpelo Island from Central or from South America, because the genus is distributed in both regions. Both species are patchily distributed on Malpelo and live under rocks in high densities. Their abundances increase towards higher altitudes. There is some segregation concerning the resting sites. Ischnocion conica rests on the soil or partially buried, while M. labiata almost always hangs from the underside of rocks.
    Print ISSN: 0260-1230
    Electronic ISSN: 1464-3766
    Topics: Biology
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2014-04-29
    Description: We investigated the land-snail fauna of rain forests on the eastern slopes of Pico Biao on Bioko Island in the Gulf of Guinea. Thirty-seven plots were studied along an altitudinal transect reaching from sea level (lowland rain forest) to an altitude of 1,830 m (mossy forest). A total of 1,755 specimens were collected and were assigned to 68 land-snail species. Eleven species were new records for Bioko. At least 15 of the recorded species are endemic to Bioko. The degree of endemism was high in mossy forest (23%) and in lowland rain forest (20%), but lower in montane forest (8%). Species richness showed a hump-shaped distribution along the altitudinal gradient with a maximum at 500 m a.s.l. Species richness peaked in forests in which there had been selective logging more than 50 years ago, indicating that some disturbance may have beneficial effects on biodiversity. Species richness was correlated with the thickness of leaf litter. The availability and quality of suitable microhabitats is more important for the occurrence of snail species than gradients of otherwise often decisive environmental parameters like temperature, which are strongly correlated with altitude. A lack of clustering of the occurrences of different snail species along the altitudinal gradient indicated a Gleasonian meta-community structure with individualistic responses of the various species to environmental parameters. No negative co-occurrence patterns that might provide evidence for interspecific competition could be detected. The frequent coexistence of morphologically similar, and presumably ecologically equivalent, congeneric species may indicate that such equivalents do not exclude each other as predicted by the neutral theory of biodiversity. However, current knowledge about individual snail species is too scanty to exclude the possibility that niches of congeneric species differ in some details.
    Print ISSN: 0260-1230
    Electronic ISSN: 1464-3766
    Topics: Biology
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2014-05-24
    Description: Annelida is one of three animal groups possessing segmentation and is central in considerations about the evolution of different character traits. It has even been proposed that the bilaterian ancestor resembled an annelid. However, a robust phylogeny of Annelida, especially with respect to the basal relationships, has been lacking. Our study based on transcriptomic data comprising 68,750–170,497 amino acid sites from 305 to 622 proteins resolves annelid relationships, including Chaetopteridae, Amphinomidae, Sipuncula, Oweniidae, and Magelonidae in the basal part of the tree. Myzostomida, which have been indicated to belong to the basal radiation as well, are now found deeply nested within Annelida as sister group to Errantia in most analyses. On the basis of our reconstruction of a robust annelid phylogeny, we show that the basal branching taxa include a huge variety of life styles such as tube dwelling and deposit feeding, endobenthic and burrowing, tubicolous and filter feeding, and errant and carnivorous forms. Ancestral character state reconstruction suggests that the ancestral annelid possessed a pair of either sensory or grooved palps, bicellular eyes, biramous parapodia bearing simple chaeta, and lacked nuchal organs. Because the oldest fossil of Annelida is reported for Sipuncula (520 Ma), we infer that the early diversification of annelids took place at least in the Lower Cambrian.
    Print ISSN: 0737-4038
    Electronic ISSN: 1537-1719
    Topics: Biology
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2014-06-26
    Description: Based on molecular data three major clades have been recognized within Bilateria: Deuterostomia, Ecdysozoa, and Spiralia. Within Spiralia, small-sized and simply organized animals such as flatworms, gastrotrichs, and gnathostomulids have recently been grouped together as Platyzoa. However, the representation of putative platyzoans was low in the respective molecular phylogenetic studies, in terms of both, taxon number and sequence data. Furthermore, increased substitution rates in platyzoan taxa raised the possibility that monophyletic Platyzoa represents an artifact due to long-branch attraction. In order to overcome such problems, we employed a phylogenomic approach, thereby substantially increasing 1) the number of sampled species within Platyzoa and 2) species-specific sequence coverage in data sets of up to 82,162 amino acid positions. Using established and new measures (long-branch score), we disentangled phylogenetic signal from misleading effects such as long-branch attraction. In doing so, our phylogenomic analyses did not recover a monophyletic origin of platyzoan taxa that, instead, appeared paraphyletic with respect to the other spiralians. Platyhelminthes and Gastrotricha formed a monophylum, which we name Rouphozoa. To the exclusion of Gnathifera, Rouphozoa and all other spiralians represent a monophyletic group, which we name Platytrochozoa. Platyzoan paraphyly suggests that the last common ancestor of Spiralia was a simple-bodied organism lacking coelomic cavities, segmentation, and complex brain structures, and that more complex animals such as annelids evolved from such a simply organized ancestor. This conclusion contradicts alternative evolutionary scenarios proposing an annelid-like ancestor of Bilateria and Spiralia and several independent events of secondary reduction.
    Print ISSN: 0737-4038
    Electronic ISSN: 1537-1719
    Topics: Biology
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2016-01-19
    Description: Phylogenetic analyses based on 16S rDNA sequences and AFLP data showed that Clausilia as defined by a normal-type clausilial apparatus is not monophyletic, but that the Clausilia ( Strobeliella ) species from the southern Alps form a clade with C. corynodes and C. strobeli , which were previously classified in a separate genus, Neostyriaca , because of their Graciliaria -type clausilial apparatus. A sister group relationship between C. corynodes and C. ( Strobeliella ) as shown in the molecular phylogenies indicates that the Graciliaria -type clausilial apparatus even originated twice independently in the Clausilia group. Thus, we propose to classify Neostyriaca as a subgenus of Clausilia , but restrict it to C. corynodes , and to accept Lombardiella as a subgenus of Clausilia for the C. strobeli group. Based on the analyses of the 16S rDNA sequences and the AFLP data, C. ( Strobeliella ) can be divided into two partly sympatric species, C. brembina and C. whateliana . The AFLP data indicate extensive admixture between C. whateliana and C. exoptata , which are not reciprocally monophyletic in the mitochondrial gene tree. Gene flow between these taxa is also corroborated by morphologically intermediate specimens in several populations. Thus, we suggest classifying C. exoptata as a subspecies of C. whateliana . Whereas C. brembina alanica is sister to the C. umbrosa gardonensis + C. u. umbrosa clade in the16S rDNA tree, it is more closely related to the C. b. brembina + C. b. klemmi clade in the AFLP tree. The admixture analysis indicated gene flow between C. b. alanica and both clades. Thus, we suggest classifying C. u. gardonensis and C. u. umbrosa , which have been considered a separate species so far, as subspecies of C. brembina .
    Print ISSN: 0260-1230
    Electronic ISSN: 1464-3766
    Topics: Biology
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2016-01-19
    Description: We investigated the land-snail fauna in Afromontane forest along three transects on the eastern slopes of the Rwenzori Mountains in Uganda. Forty plots at altitudes between 1,770 and 2,932 m were studied. A total of 4,823 specimens were collected and were assigned to 91 land-snail species. Considering additional literature records, the land-snail fauna of the Rwenzori Mountains includes at least 174 species (142 on the Ugandan side). Currently, no area in Africa of a similar size is known to harbour such high regional land-snail species richness. The high species richness and endemism are partly the result of radiations of several Afromontane groups within the Rwenzori Mountains. The regional richness in the Albertine Rift is mainly affected by the distance from Pleistocene forest refugia. The majority of the species recorded in the Rwenzori Mountains extends from the lowest investigated altitudinal levels to different upper altitudinal levels, but there are also groups of species that are restricted to higher altitudes. Thus, the change of the composition of the land-snail communities along the altitudinal gradient is not completely gradual, but there is a rapid turnover in parallel with the transition from the montane rainforest zone to the bamboo zone. Whereas minute Afromontane species often have wide, disjunct distributions across East Africa, larger sized Afromontane snail groups are usually represented by endemic species in different mountain ranges. The better passive dispersal abilities of microsnails probably resulted in a higher gene flow between mountain ranges, resulting in coherence of the populations and a reduced likelihood of speciation.
    Print ISSN: 0260-1230
    Electronic ISSN: 1464-3766
    Topics: Biology
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  • 9
  • 10
    Publication Date: 2010-04-09
    Print ISSN: 0737-4038
    Electronic ISSN: 1537-1719
    Topics: Biology
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